A radiant cluster of blooming red roses in warm golden light with soft glowing bokeh — unmistakable, certain warm affection.
Yes — the signs point to real, warm interest.

Does he like me · Result

Yes, he’s into you

The signs are pretty clear.

Consistent attention, real curiosity, follow-through. He’s showing up.

The read

Here is the good news, stated plainly: you are not squinting to find the signal, because the signal is just there. Across the things you can actually observe — initiating contact, remembering the small stuff, making plans, asking real questions and listening to the answers — the pattern came back steady and warm. That matters more than it might feel like it does, because behaviour is much harder to fake than a feeling and far more honest than a vibe. Researchers who study attraction (Hall and Xing coded thirty-six separate flirting behaviours in one well-known 2015 study) keep landing on the same short list: asking questions, self-disclosure, leaning in, sustained attention, and a kind of attentive, un-fidgety focus. Those are precisely the behaviours your answers lit up. He doesn’t just respond when you reach out; he reaches in first, and he does it consistently enough that the pattern reads as a habit rather than a fluke.

Now the honest part, because we don’t do fairy-tale endings here. "He’s into you" is not the same as "this will become a relationship," and it is definitely not the same as "this will be easy." Consistent interest is the data; what the two of you actually build with it is a separate question, and that one is still wide open. The classic trap at this end of the scale is auditing — re-reading every text for a hidden meaning, screenshotting things for friends, hunting for the catch when his behaviour is already answering the question out loud. If you find that you still can’t relax even with green flags everywhere, that restlessness is usually about your own nervous system rather than anything he’s doing. It’s worth noticing, gently, because it’s the part you can actually work on — and the part most likely to follow you into the next good thing if you don’t.

So let yourself enjoy it without grading every message. Match roughly what he’s offering — initiate about as much as he does, share about as much as he shares — and trust that you don’t have to over-extend, perform, or audition to keep his interest, because it is already here. And if you genuinely want to know where it’s heading, ask. Someone who shows up this consistently can almost always handle a calm, direct question; "what is this, for you?" is allowed, and it tends to land well with a person who’s already present rather than scaring them off. The quiz can tell you the vibe is good, and right now it is telling you so clearly. Only the conversation tells you what happens next — and from where you’re standing, with this much pointing your way, that’s a conversation well worth having.

Consistent attention, real curiosity, follow-through. He’s showing up.

What you might do next

  • Let yourself enjoy it without auditing every text. Consistent behaviour is the data — trust what you’re seeing.
  • If you’re unsure where it’s going, a calm, direct question lands well with someone who’s actually present. "What is this for you?" is allowed.
  • Notice if you’re still anxious despite clear signals — that’s often about your attachment system, not him. The Attachment quiz is a useful mirror there.

These are options, not orders. You know your situation; we don’t.

Read this through four other lenses

Sometimes "does he like me?" is really a question about your own nervous system — and sometimes it’s about the kind of person whose signals tend to land this way.

Your attachmentSecure attachmentClear, consistent signals are easiest to receive from a secure base. If you still can’t relax with green flags everywhere, that gap is about your attachment system, not his behaviour.
Their zodiacCancer · LeoExpressive water-and-fire signs like Cancer and Leo tend to wear interest on their sleeve — part of why a read this legible feels so clean.
Their typeENFJ · ESFPFeeling-and-extraverted types broadcast warmth openly; with them, interest is rarely something you have to decode.
Big FiveExtraversionHigh extraversion paired with agreeableness makes a person’s interest visible — they initiate, express, and follow through where you can actually see it.
One honest note. Behavioural cues are a genuinely unreliable signal to read. Psychologists have documented errors in both directions: over-perception — reading interest into ordinary friendliness, the hopeful false positive — and under-perception, where real interest gets missed, often through low self-esteem (the false negative). Even neutral observers struggle to detect attraction from subtle cues. This quiz weighs the signals; it does not hand you certainty. The real answer comes from a conversation — so if you can ask without checking what the quiz said first, ask.

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